Southern Syria

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Syria in the Ottoman Cedid Atlas of 1803. In the yellow area, corresponding to the Levant, the medium sized bold text at the far right says “برشام” (“Bar Sham” or "Outskirts of Damascus/Syria"), and at bottom, it says "ارض فلاستان" ("Land of Palestine"). Near the top of the yellow area, it also says "الشام" (Al-Sham, meaning "Damascus/Syria". At the bottom right outside the yellow area in large text it says "بادية العرب" ("The Arab Desert", badiat il-Arab)

Southern Syria (Arabic: سوريا الجنوبية, romanized: Sūriyā al-Janūbiyya) is a geographical term referring to the southern portion of either the Ottoman-period Vilayet of Syria,[1] or the modern-day Arab Republic of Syria.

The term was used in the Arabic language primarily from 1919 until the end of the Franco-Syrian war in July 1920, during which the Arab Kingdom of Syria existed.[2][3][4][5]

Zachary Foster, in his Princeton University doctoral dissertation, has written that in the decades prior to World War I, the term “Southern Syria” was the least frequently used out of ten different ways to describe the region of Palestine in Arabic, noting it was so rare that “it took me nearly a decade to find a handful of references”.[6]

Throughout the Ottoman period, prior to 1888, the Levant was viewed administratively as part of one province called the Vilayet of Syria and was divided into districts known as "Sanjaks".

Palestine was, by the end of 19th and early 20th centuries divided into the Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem, the Nablus Sanjak, and the Acre Sanjak (under Beirut Vilayet from 1888, and previously under Syria Vilayet), and a short-lived Mutasarrıfate of Karak in Transjordan (split as a new administrative unit from Syria Vilayet in 1894/5).[citation needed] In 1884, the governor of Damascus proposed the establishment of a new Vilayet in southern Syria, composed of the regions of Jerusalem, Balqa' and Ma'an though nothing came out of this.[7]

In the beginning of Faisal’s reign in the Arab Kingdom of Syria, particularly after the San Remo Conference of March 1920, the term "Southern Syria" emerged as a political neologism synonymous with Palestine,[2] and it would take on an increased political significance as a way of rejecting the separation of Palestine from the Kingdom.[8]

Usage during British and French occupation

References

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